I crashed my mountain bike pretty hard this past August and broke my shoulder blade, left humerus, separated my shoulder, and borked up a couple of discs in my low back. After a couple months rest, I still couldn't lift my rotary table off of my milling machine, or swap out the vertical/horizontal spindles or lift anything more than 20-30lb to do any bike work so I took on a project that I've wanted to do for a long time...build a guitar from scratch. I don't have a telecaster style guitar and it's fairly simple, being a slab so it seemed like a good choice for a first attempt.
IMG_1408 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
I didn't have a way to joint the pieces for glue-up, so I made a shooting board. The 1.9" thick ash proved a bit too robust to cleanly plane it, so a bit of sticky-backed paper was applied to the sole to tune it up for a gap free fit.
IMG_1413 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
The glued slab needed to be taken down to 1.75". It was done in small increments with as much movement as my shoulder could take each day.
IMG_1507 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
After roughing out the neck profile, and finalizing it with few passes of the router, some paper stuck to my granite slab seemed like an adequate way to make the neck flat with the two planes parallel.
IMG_1544 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
With the neck flat to about 0.001" I stuck it on the mill bed to cut channels for the carbon stiffeners and truss rod.
IMG_1549 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
The stiffeners were epoxied in place while the double action truss rod was a press on the ends with a little dab of silicone to ensure the center doesn't rattle.
IMG_1551 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
The top side was sanded flat again to clean up any epoxy squeeze out. The carbon rods sit a few thou under the top surface.
IMG_1603 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
After thicknessing and slotting the fret board, I cut the fret slots and milled a little cutaway for truss rod access.
IMG_1605 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
center marks were laid out and punched and holes drilled for dot markers
IMG_1608 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
markers set with CA glue and a couple of guides clamped to the table to radius the fretboard
IMG_1632 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
The fretboard was epoxied on, the headstock trimmed down and the neck mounted to the mill table again for final fretboard radius.
IMG_1633 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
side dots marked drilled and glued.
IMG_1643 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
I'm not a fan of the old style Fender blocky neck area so I worked on profiling the neck closely to the profile of the body. This is somewhere in the middle of that process.
IMG_1653 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
The stainless fret tangs proved to be much more robust than my Knipex end nippers, so some scraps and a file were used to remove the tangs from the ends. I'm not binding the neck, but I wanted them undercut so I could drop in a little dust and CA to hide the tangs.
IMG_1656 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
IMG_1657 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
I pressed in the frets with a few drops of CA and hit it with accelerator while it was being held down.
IMG_1672 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
All the work making the neck and fretboard very flat (about 0.001" of variation) paid off and only two frets needed a minuscule amount of filing to be perfectly in line with the rest.
IMG_1681 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
Working on the neck profile was an iterative process. A spoke shave was used for the bulk of removal and then it was chalked and sanded with paper mounted to an 8x8" flat board going across the grain. This does a great job of showing you that you've removed all the high spots.
IMG_1691 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
While figuring out how I was going to finish the guitar, I decided to make some string ferrules out of some 6/4 ti scrap I had laying around. It was the perfect length to make 6 ferrules.
IMG_1698 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
IMG_1720 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
Marked the nut with equal space between strings.
IMG_1913 by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
Finally built up.
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